Bucs manager Clint Hurdle tried. The only place it got him was into his office, prematurely, drawing his own ejection from crew chief Jeff Nelson for vociferously protesting Basner's quick thumb.

Even more than an hour later, following the Pirates' 12-7 victory, Hurdle was still steamed by the events. He discussed them with outward calm, yet clearly was not pleased that the Dodgers got in a free shot on McCutchen. The Pirates skipper was not arguing that McCutchen had been hit intentionally -- only that his circumstances were more conducive toward a judgment of intent.

"The umpire's job is to judge intent. There's a mound visit with McCutchen at the plate," said Hurdle, setting the stage for Jamey Wright's pitch with two on and two outs in the sixth, "and a ball's thrown upper body, hits him on the back of the shoulder, and there was no intent judged there.

"Wilson's trying to pitch hard in. He always pitches hard in. The judgment was that was intentional. They didn't want to [deal with a warning], just threw him out."

Wilson had just entered the game, taking over for starter Vance Worley with the Bucs ahead, 8-4. Jared Hughes replaced Wilson, and promptly surrendered a two-run homer to the first batter he faced, lefty-hitting Adrian Gonzalez. Hughes then retired the next three men, keeping intact the Bucs' usual end-game relief order.

"Yeah, absolutely [that was big], to get through that inning and we still had the lead," Wilson said. "The team won the game, and that's the biggest thing we're trying to do here."

The ejection was the fourth of the season for Hurdle, who last year tied for the Major League lead in that department with six.

As angered as Hurdle was in the top of the seventh, the 30,629 fans in PNC Park sounded equally irate in the bottom of the inning when Wright plunked another Pirates player, Russell Martin, without any consequence. The game also proceeded without any further incidents, other than the nonstop booing from the Pirates faithful.